From 0e39139e505a8310ae8530fb2463a9e8f2170d2f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: HATAYAMA Daisuke <d.hatayama@jp.fujitsu.com>
Date: Sat, 24 Sep 2016 21:56:07 +0900
Subject: [PATCH] sysctl: configure kernel parameters in the order they occur
in each sysctl configuration files (#4205)
Currently, systemd-sysctl command configures kernel parameters in each sysctl
configuration files in random order due to characteristics of iterator of
Hashmap.
However, kernel parameters need to be configured in the order they occur in
each sysctl configuration files.
- For example, consider fs.suid_coredump and kernel.core_pattern. If
fs.suid_coredump=2 is configured before kernel.core_pattern= whose default
value is "core", then kernel outputs the following message:
Unsafe core_pattern used with suid_dumpable=2. Pipe handler or fully qualified core dump path required.
Note that the security issue mentioned in this message has already been fixed
on recent kernels, so this is just a warning message on such kernels. But
it's still confusing to users that this message is output on some boot and
not output on another boot.
- I don't know but there could be other kernel parameters that are significant
in the order they are configured.
- The legacy sysctl command configures kernel parameters in the order they
occur in each sysctl configuration files. Although I didn't find any official
specification explaining this behavior of sysctl command, I don't think there
is any meaningful reason to change this behavior, in particular, to the
random one.
This commit does the change by simply using OrderedHashmap instead of
Hashmap.
(cherry picked from commit 886cf982d3018f7451f0548dadbc05bd2d583bb6)
Resolves: #1382244
---
src/sysctl/sysctl.c | 20 ++++++++++----------
1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/src/sysctl/sysctl.c b/src/sysctl/sysctl.c
index 4fb293b..bb2bea7 100644
--- a/src/sysctl/sysctl.c
+++ b/src/sysctl/sysctl.c
@@ -90,14 +90,14 @@ static int apply_sysctl(const char *property, const char *value) {
return r;
}
-static int apply_all(Hashmap *sysctl_options) {
- int r = 0;
+static int apply_all(OrderedHashmap *sysctl_options) {
+ int r;
char *property, *value;
Iterator i;
assert(sysctl_options);
- HASHMAP_FOREACH_KEY(value, property, sysctl_options, i) {
+ ORDERED_HASHMAP_FOREACH_KEY(value, property, sysctl_options, i) {
int k;
k = apply_sysctl(property, value);
@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ static int apply_all(Hashmap *sysctl_options) {
return r;
}
-static int parse_file(Hashmap *sysctl_options, const char *path, bool ignore_enoent) {
+static int parse_file(OrderedHashmap *sysctl_options, const char *path, bool ignore_enoent) {
_cleanup_fclose_ FILE *f = NULL;
int r;
@@ -171,13 +171,13 @@ static int parse_file(Hashmap *sysctl_options, const char *path, bool ignore_eno
}
found:
- existing = hashmap_get2(sysctl_options, p, &v);
+ existing = ordered_hashmap_get2(sysctl_options, p, &v);
if (existing) {
if (streq(value, existing))
continue;
log_debug("Overwriting earlier assignment of %s in file '%s'.", p, path);
- free(hashmap_remove(sysctl_options, p));
+ free(ordered_hashmap_remove(sysctl_options, p));
free(v);
}
@@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ found:
return log_oom();
}
- k = hashmap_put(sysctl_options, property, new_value);
+ k = ordered_hashmap_put(sysctl_options, property, new_value);
if (k < 0) {
log_error_errno(k, "Failed to add sysctl variable %s to hashmap: %m", property);
free(property);
@@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ static int parse_argv(int argc, char *argv[]) {
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
int r = 0, k;
- Hashmap *sysctl_options;
+ OrderedHashmap *sysctl_options;
r = parse_argv(argc, argv);
if (r <= 0)
@@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
umask(0022);
- sysctl_options = hashmap_new(&string_hash_ops);
+ sysctl_options = ordered_hashmap_new(&string_hash_ops);
if (!sysctl_options) {
r = log_oom();
goto finish;
@@ -331,7 +331,7 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
r = k;
finish:
- hashmap_free_free_free(sysctl_options);
+ ordered_hashmap_free_free_free(sysctl_options);
strv_free(arg_prefixes);
return r < 0 ? EXIT_FAILURE : EXIT_SUCCESS;